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EN_01272242_0354 AFP

Tourists walk past a wall painted with the slogan "I love Guam" in the Tumon district on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Nuclear-armed North Korea announced a detailed plan on August 10 to send a salvo of four missiles over Japan and towards the US territory of Guam, raising the stakes in a stand-off with President Donald Trump and mocking him as "bereft of reason". / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA

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Soldiers plant the American flag on Guam eight minutes after U.S. assault troops landed. The Mariana Islands were taken from the Japanese to establish air bases for long range bombers. July 20, 1944. (BSLOC_2013-12_216)

Courtesy Everett Collection

EN_01271939_0019 PLA

The front gate of Guam's Andersen AFB. The base is being proposed as a base for a Global Strike Task Force. If the military decides to base a Global Strike Task Force at Andersen Air Force Base, the island could see an increase of at least 2,400 military, An Air Force B-52 bomber crashed off the island of Guam after take off on July 21, 2008. (Tim Tock/Polaris)

EN_01272242_0492 AFP

Tourists board on a bus along a street in Tamuning on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Tourism-dependent Guam is looking to cash in on its new-found fame as a North Korean missile target, tapping an unlikely promotional opportunity to attract visitors to the idyllic island and prove that all publicity is good publicity. / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA

EN_01272242_0499 AFP

Tourists enjoy the activities along Tumon beach on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Tourism-dependent Guam is looking to cash in on its new-found fame as a North Korean missile target, tapping an unlikely promotional opportunity to attract visitors to the idyllic island and prove that all publicity is good publicity. / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA

EN_01272242_0508 AFP

A tourist poses for next to a miniature Statue of Liberty at Paseo de Susan Park in Agana near Hagatna on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Tourism-dependent Guam is looking to cash in on its new-found fame as a North Korean missile target, tapping an unlikely promotional opportunity to attract visitors to the idyllic island and prove that all publicity is good publicity. / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA

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Flag of Guam, an island territory of the United States in the north Pacific Ocean.

EN_01271962_0399 AFP

(COMBO) This combo of file photos shows an image (L) taken on April 15, 2017 of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un on a balcony of the Grand People's Study House following a military parade in Pyongyang; and an image (R) taken on July 19, 2017 of US President Donald Trump speaking during the first meeting of the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity in Washington, DC. Nuclear-armed North Korea mocked President Donald Trump as "bereft of reason" on August 10, 2017, raising the stakes in their stand-off with an unusually detailed plan to send a salvo of missiles towards the US territory of Guam. / AFP PHOTO / SAUL LOEB AND Ed JONES

EN_01272242_0498 AFP

Tourists enjoy the activities near Tumon beach on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Tourism-dependent Guam is looking to cash in on its new-found fame as a North Korean missile target, tapping an unlikely promotional opportunity to attract visitors to the idyllic island and prove that all publicity is good publicity. / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA

EN_01271939_0017 PLA

The War in the Pacific National Historical Park on the island of Guam was decked out in flags of the USA and the Guam flag at the park's Asan Unit. The park was busy throughout the weekend with people from all walks of life visiting this unique display on the shores of the Asan Invasion Beach. Guam was occupied by Japan during WWII and Guam has a very patriotic community with a high number of its population serving in the US armed forces. (Tim Tock/Polaris)

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Members of the US Navy parade down Marine Corps Drive in the 60th Liberation Day Parade (end of World War II in the Pacific), in downtown Hagatna on the US Territory of Guam. Guam is the only US soil held by the Japanese during World War II. US forces shelled the island and stormed the beach. (Tim Tock/Polaris)

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August 7, 2017 - Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, United States: A U.S. Air Force B-1B Lancer assigned to the 37th Expeditionary Bomb Squadron, deployed from Ellsworth Air Force Base, South Dakota, prepares to take off from Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, for a 10-hour mission, flying in the vicinity of Kyushu, Japan, the East China Sea, and the Korean peninsula, Aug. 7, 2017 (HST). During the mission, two B-1s were joined by Japan Air Self-Defense Force F-2s as well as Republic of Korea Air Force KF-16 fighter jets, performing two sequential bilateral missions. These flights with Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK) demonstrate solidarity between Japan, ROK and the U.S. to defend against provocative and destabilizing actions in the Pacific theater. North Korea said on Aug. 9, 2017 it is "carefully examining" plans for a missile strike on the U.S. Pacific territory of Guam, just hours after U.S. President Donald Trump told the North that any threat to the United States would be met with "fire and fury." (Polaris)

EN_01271939_0027 IMA

Guam USA Territory Talofofo bay with waves in cove in Talofofo in south east Guam McPBBA McPBBA Guam USA Territory Bay With Waves in Cove in in South East Guam McPBBA McPBBA

Tourists disembark from a bus along a street in Tamuning on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Tourism-dependent Guam is looking to cash in on its new-found fame as a North Korean missile target, tapping an unlikely promotional opportunity to attract visitors to the idyllic island and prove that all publicity is good publicity. / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA

The Guam seal is pictured at the Great Seal of Guam Park in the city of Hagatna on the island of Guam on August 10, 2017. Guam's governor on August 10 said the US territory was "well-equipped" to handle any North Korean strike thanks to robust infrastructure that had survived earthquakes and typhoons, after Pyongyang released a detailed plan to launch missiles towards the island. / AFP PHOTO / Robert TENORIO

EN_01272242_0501 AFP

Tourists enjoy the activities along Tumon beach on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Tourism-dependent Guam is looking to cash in on its new-found fame as a North Korean missile target, tapping an unlikely promotional opportunity to attract visitors to the idyllic island and prove that all publicity is good publicity. / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA

EN_01271939_0020 PLA

The majority of Northern Guam is the home of Andersen AFB, which is proposed for a large military buildup. An Air Force B-52 bomber crashed off the island of Guam after take off on July 21, 2008. (Tim Tock/Polaris)

EN_01272242_0506 AFP

Tourists pose for photos in front of a miniature Statue of Liberty at Paseo de Susan Park in Agana near Hagatna on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Tourism-dependent Guam is looking to cash in on its new-found fame as a North Korean missile target, tapping an unlikely promotional opportunity to attract visitors to the idyllic island and prove that all publicity is good publicity. / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA

EN_01272242_0514 AFP

Afternoon traffic passes in front of a wall painted with US and Guam flags in the Tumon district on the island of Guam on August 11, 2017. Tourism-dependent Guam is looking to cash in on its new-found fame as a North Korean missile target, tapping an unlikely promotional opportunity to attract visitors to the idyllic island and prove that all publicity is good publicity. / AFP PHOTO / Virgilio VALENCIA